Poll shows British public heavily in favour of burka ban

Twice as many British people support a ban on women wearing a burka than oppose one, with a majority also in favour of outlawing the burkini, according to a poll published last Thursday.

Some 57 percent of the 1,668 adults polled by YouGov said they supported "a law that bans people from wearing the burka in the UK", with 36 percent "strongly supporting" the ban compared to only 10 percent who were "strongly opposed".

The poll comes following a row in France about the banning of the burkini in around 30 coastal resorts in the Riviera. The country's highest administrative court later suspended the ruling after it was challenged by rights groups.[embed:render:embedded:node:24853]

Some 46 percent of British people would support a similar ban on the burkini, against 30 percent who were opposed, with 18 percent neither for or against.

Support for the ban on the burka, worn by women in some Islamic traditions to hide the body and face, was uniform across supporters of all political parties, although strongest among Conservative and UK Independence Party backers.

The only demographics to oppose the ban were 18-24 year-olds – by a margin of six percent – and those who voted to remain in the European Union, but only by a margin of three percent.

The ban was also supported across the regions, with 51 percent of Londoners and 63 percent of northerners in favour.

A similar YouGov survey in Germany found 62 percent in support of a burka ban, but another in the United States found that 59 percent believed "people should be allowed to decide for themselves what to wear."    (AFP)

Related articles on Qantara.de:

France's burka ban: Excluding the wrong people

Essay by Sara Silvestri: Britain does not need a French-style burqa ban

Who is hidden beneath the burka? An appeal to the West